fbpx
Wikipedia

Western (genre)

The Western is a genre set in the American frontier and commonly associated with folk tales of the Western United States, particularly the Southwestern United States, as well as Northern Mexico and Western Canada. It is commonly referred to as the "Old West" or the "Wild West" and depicted in Western media as a hostile, sparsely populated frontier in a state of near-total lawlessness patrolled by outlaws, sheriffs, and numerous other stock "gunslinger" characters. Western narratives often concern the gradual attempts to tame the crime-ridden American West using wider themes of justice, freedom, rugged individualism, Manifest Destiny, and the national history and identity of the United States.

Justus D. Barnes in Western apparel, as "Bronco Billy Anderson", from the silent film The Great Train Robbery (1903), the second Western film and the first one shot in the United States
PLAY The Great Train Robbery (1903); runtime 00:11:51.

History

 
John Wayne in The Comancheros (1961)

The first films that belong to the Western genre are a series of short single reel silents made in 1894 by Edison Studios at their Black Maria studio in West Orange, New Jersey. These featured veterans of Buffalo Bill's Wild West show exhibiting skills acquired by living in the Old West – they included Annie Oakley (shooting) and members of the Sioux (dancing).[1]

The earliest known Western narrative film is the British short Kidnapping by Indians, made by Mitchell and Kenyon in Blackburn, England, in 1899.[2][3] The Great Train Robbery (1903, based on the earlier British film A Daring Daylight Burglary), Edwin S. Porter's film starring Broncho Billy Anderson, is often erroneously cited as the first Western, though George N. Fenin and William K. Everson point out (as mentioned above) that the "Edison company had played with Western material for several years prior to The Great Train Robbery". Nonetheless, they concur that Porter's film "set the pattern—of crime, pursuit, and retribution—for the Western film as a genre".[4] The film's popularity opened the door for Anderson to become the screen's first Western star; he made several hundred Western film shorts. So popular was the genre that he soon faced competition from Tom Mix and William S. Hart.[5]

"Golden Age"

The period from the late 1940s to the 1950s has been called the "Golden Age of the Western".[6] It is epitomized by the work of several prominent directors including:

Stories and characters

Stories commonly center on the life of a nomadic, male, white American drifter, cowboy or gunfighter who rides a horse and is armed with a revolver and/or a rifle. The male characters typically wear broad-brimmed and high-crowned Stetson hats, neckerchief bandannas, vests, and cowboy boots with spurs. While many wear conventional shirts and trousers, alternatives include buckskins and dusters).

Women are generally cast in secondary roles as romantic interest for the male lead; or in supporting roles as saloon girls, prostitutes or as the wives of pioneers and settlers (the wife character often provides a measure of comic relief). Other recurring characters include Native Americans of various tribes, African Americans, Mexicans, lawmen, bounty hunters, outlaws, bartenders, traders, gamblers, soldiers (especially mounted cavalry), pioneers and settlers (farmers, ranchers, and townsfolk).

The ambience is usually punctuated with a Western music score, including American folk music and Spanish/Mexican folk music such as country, Native American music, New Mexico music, and rancheras.

Locations

Westerns often stress the harshness of the wilderness and frequently set the action in an arid, desolate landscape of deserts and mountains. Often, the vast landscape plays an important role, presenting a "mythic vision of the plains and deserts of the American West".[7] Specific settings include ranches, small frontier towns, saloons, railways, wilderness, and isolated military forts of the Wild West. Many Westerns use a stock plot of depicting a crime, then showing the pursuit of the wrongdoer, ending in revenge and retribution, which is often dispensed through a shootout or quick-draw duel.[8][9][10]

Themes

 
The Lone Ranger, a famous heroic lawman, was with a cavalry of six Texas Rangers until they all, except for him, were killed. He preferred to remain anonymous, so he resigned and built a sixth grave that supposedly held his body. He fights on as a lawman, wearing a mask, for "Outlaws live in a world of fear. Fear of the mysterious".

The Western genre sometimes portrays the conquest of the wilderness and the subordination of nature in the name of civilization or the confiscation of the territorial rights of the original, Native American, inhabitants of the frontier.[11] The Western depicts a society organized around codes of honor and personal, direct or private justice–"frontier justice"–dispensed by gunfights. These honor codes are often played out through depictions of feuds or individuals seeking personal revenge or retribution against someone who has wronged them (e.g., True Grit has revenge and retribution as its main themes). This Western depiction of personal justice contrasts sharply with justice systems organized around rationalistic, abstract law that exist in cities, in which social order is maintained predominantly through relatively impersonal institutions such as courtrooms. The popular perception of the Western is a story that centers on the life of a seminomadic wanderer, usually a cowboy or a gunfighter.[11] A showdown or duel at high noon featuring two or more gunfighters is a stereotypical scene in the popular conception of Westerns.

In some ways, such protagonists may be considered the literary descendants of the knights-errant, who stood at the center of earlier extensive genres such as the Arthurian romances.[11] Like the cowboy or gunfighter of the Western, the knight-errant of the earlier European tales and poetry was wandering from place to place on his horse, fighting villains of various kinds, and bound to no fixed social structures, but only to his own innate code of honor. Like knights-errant, the heroes of Westerns frequently rescue damsels in distress. Similarly, the wandering protagonists of Westerns share many characteristics with the ronin in modern Japanese culture.

The Western typically takes these elements and uses them to tell simple morality tales, although some notable examples (e.g. the later Westerns of John Ford or Clint Eastwood's Unforgiven, about an old hired killer) are more morally ambiguous. Westerns often stress the harshness and isolation of the wilderness, and frequently set the action in an arid, desolate landscape. Western films generally have specific settings, such as isolated ranches, Native American villages, or small frontier towns with a saloon. Oftentimes, these settings appear deserted and without much structure. Apart from the wilderness, the saloon usually emphasizes that this is the Wild West; it is the place to go for music (raucous piano playing), women (often prostitutes), gambling (draw poker or five-card stud), drinking (beer, whiskey, or tequila if set in Mexico), brawling, and shooting. In some Westerns, where civilization has arrived, the town has a church, a general store, a bank, and a school; in others, where frontier rules still hold sway, it is, as Sergio Leone said, "where life has no value".

Plots

Author and screenwriter Frank Gruber identified seven basic plots for Westerns:[12]

  • Union Pacific story: The plot concerns construction of a railroad, a telegraph line, or some other type of modern technology on the wild frontier. Wagon-train stories fall into this category.
  • Ranch story: Ranchers protecting their family ranch from rustlers or large landowners attempting to force out the proper owners.
  • Empire story: The plot involves building a ranch empire or an oil empire from scratch, a classic rags-to-riches plot, often involving conflict over resources such as water or minerals
  • Revenge story: The plot often involves an elaborate chase and pursuit by a wronged individual, but it may also include elements of the classic mystery story.
  • Cavalry and Indian story: The plot revolves around "taming" the wilderness for White settlers and/or fighting Native Americans
  • Outlaw story: The outlaw gangs dominate the action.
  • Marshal story: The lawman and his challenges drive the plot

Gruber said that good writers used dialogue and plot development to develop these basic plots into believable stories.

Film

Characteristics

The American Film Institute defines Western films as those "set in the American West that [embody] the spirit, the struggle, and the demise of the new frontier".[13] The term "Western", used to describe a narrative film genre, appears to have originated with a July 1912 article in Motion Picture World magazine.[14] Most of the characteristics of Western films were part of 19th-century popular Western fiction, and were firmly in place before film became a popular art form.[15] Western films commonly feature protagonists such as cowboys, gunslingers, and bounty hunters, who are often depicted as seminomadic wanderers who wear Stetson hats, bandannas, spurs, and buckskins, use revolvers or rifles as everyday tools of survival and as a means to settle disputes using "frontier justice". Protagonists ride between dusty towns and cattle ranches on their trusty steeds.[citation needed]

Western films were enormously popular in the silent-film era (1894–1927). With the advent of sound in 1927–28, the major Hollywood studios rapidly abandoned Westerns,[16] leaving the genre to smaller studios and producers. These smaller organizations churned out countless low-budget features and serials in the 1930s. By the late 1930s, the Western film was widely regarded as a "pulp" genre in Hollywood, but its popularity was dramatically revived in 1939 by major studio productions such as Dodge City starring Errol Flynn, Jesse James with Tyrone Power, Union Pacific with Joel McCrea, Destry Rides Again featuring James Stewart and Marlene Dietrich, and especially John Ford's landmark Western adventure Stagecoach starring John Wayne, which became one of the biggest hits of the year. Released through United Artists, Stagecoach made John Wayne a mainstream screen star in the wake of a decade of headlining B Westerns. Wayne had been introduced to the screen 10 years earlier as the leading man in director Raoul Walsh's spectacular widescreen The Big Trail, which failed at the box office in spite of being shot on location across the American West, including the Grand Canyon, Yosemite, and the giant redwoods, due in part to exhibitors' inability to switch over to widescreen during the Great Depression. After the Westerns' renewed commercial successes in the late 1930s, their popularity continued to rise until its peak in the 1950s, when the number of Western films produced outnumbered all other genres combined.[17]

Screenwriter and scholar Eric R. Williams identifies western films as one of eleven super-genres in his screenwriters' taxonomy, claiming that all feature length narrative films can be classified by these super-genres. The other ten super-genres are action, crime, fantasy, horror, romance, science fiction, slice of life, sports, thriller, and war.[18] Western films often depict conflicts with Native Americans. While early Eurocentric Westerns frequently portray the "Injuns" as dishonorable villains, the later and more culturally neutral Westerns gave Native Americans a more sympathetic treatment. Other recurring themes of Westerns include treks (e.g. The Big Trail) or perilous journeys (e.g. Stagecoach) or groups of bandits terrorizing small towns such as in The Magnificent Seven.

Early Westerns were mostly filmed in the studio, as in other early Hollywood films, but when location shooting became more common from the 1930s, producers of Westerns used desolate corners of Arizona, California, Colorado, Kansas, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah, or Wyoming. These settings gave filmmakers the ability to depict vast plains, looming mountains, and epic canyons. Productions were also filmed on location at movie ranches.[19]

Often, the vast landscape becomes more than a vivid backdrop; it becomes a character in the film. After the early 1950s, various widescreen formats such as Cinemascope (1953) and VistaVision used the expanded width of the screen to display spectacular western landscapes. John Ford's use of Monument Valley as an expressive landscape in his films from Stagecoach to Cheyenne Autumn (1965), "present us with a mythic vision of the plains and deserts of the American West, embodied most memorably in Monument Valley, with its buttes and mesas that tower above the men on horseback, whether they be settlers, soldiers, or Native Americans".[7]

Television

When television became popular in the late 1940s and 1950s, Television Westerns quickly became an audience favorite.[20] Beginning with rebroadcasts of existing films, a number of movie cowboys had their own TV shows. As demand for the Western increased, new stories and stars were introduced. A number of long-running TV Westerns became classics in their own right, such as: The Lone Ranger (1949–1957), Death Valley Days (1952–1970), The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp (1955–1961), Cheyenne (1955–1962), Gunsmoke (1955–1975), Maverick (1957–1962), Have Gun – Will Travel (1957–1963), Wagon Train (1957–1965), The Rifleman (1958–1963), Rawhide (1959–1966), Bonanza (1959–1973), The Virginian (1962–1971), and The Big Valley (1965–1969). The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp was the first Western television series written for adults,[21] premiering four days before Gunsmoke on September 6, 1955.[22][23]

The peak year for television Westerns was 1959, with 26 such shows airing during primetime. At least six of them were connected in some extent to Wyatt Earp: The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, Bat Masterson, Tombstone Territory, Broken Arrow, Johnny Ringo, and Gunsmoke.[24] Increasing costs of American television production weeded out most action half-hour series in the early 1960s, and their replacement by hour-long television shows, increasingly in color.[25] Traditional Westerns died out in the late 1960s as a result of network changes in demographic targeting along with pressure from parental television groups. Future entries in the genre would incorporate elements from other genera, such as crime drama and mystery whodunit elements. Western shows from the 1970s included Hec Ramsey, Kung Fu, Little House on the Prairie, McCloud, The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams, and the short-lived but highly acclaimed How the West Was Won that originated from a miniseries with the same name. In the 1990s and 2000s, hour-long Westerns and slickly packaged made-for-TV movie Westerns were introduced, such as Lonesome Dove (1989) and Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman. Also, new elements were once again added to the Western formula, such as science-fiction Western Firefly, created by Joss Whedon in 2002. Deadwood was a critically acclaimed Western series that aired on HBO from 2004 through 2006. Hell on Wheels, a fictionalized story of the construction of the first transcontinental railroad, aired on AMC for five seasons between 2011 and 2016. Longmire is a Western series that centered on Walt Longmire, a sheriff in fictional Absaroka County, Wyoming. Originally aired on the A&E network from 2012 to 2014, it was picked up by Netflix in 2015 until the show's conclusion in 2017.

AMC and Vince Gilligan’s critically-acclaimed Breaking Bad is a much more modern take on the western genre. Set in New Mexico from 2008 through 2013, it follows Walter White (Bryan Cranston), a chemistry teacher diagnosed with Stage III Lung Cancer who cooks and sells crystal meth to provide money for his family after he dies, while slowly growing further and further into the illicit drug market, eventually turning into a ruthless drug dealer and killer. While the show has scenes in a populated suburban neighborhood and nearby Albuquerque, much of the show takes place in the desert, where Walter often takes his RV car out into the open desert to cook his meth, and most action sequences occur in the desert, similar to old-fashioned western movies. The clash between the Wild West and modern technology like cars and cellphones, while also focusing primarily on being a Crime drama makes the show a unique spin on both genres. Walter’s reliance on the desert environment makes the western-feel a pivotal role in the show, and would continue to be used in the spinoff series Better Call Saul. [26]

Literature

Western fiction is a genre of literature set in the American Old West, most commonly between 1860 and 1900. The first critically recognized Western was The Virginian (1902) by Owen Wister."Classic Wild West Literature". Other well-known writers of Western fiction include Zane Grey, from the early 1900s, Ernest Haycox, Luke Short, and Louis L'Amour, from the mid 20th century. Many writers better known in other genres, such as Leigh Brackett, Elmore Leonard, and Larry McMurtry, have also written Western novels. The genre's popularity peaked in the 1960s, due in part to the shuttering of many pulp magazines, the popularity of televised Westerns, and the rise of the spy novel. Readership began to drop off in the mid- to late 1970s and reached a new low in the 2000s. Most bookstores, outside of a few Western states, now only carry a small number of Western novels and short-story collections.[27]

Literary forms that share similar themes include stories of the American frontier, the gaucho literature of Argentina, and tales of the settlement of the Australian Outback.

 
"As Wild felled one of the redskins by a blow from the butt of his revolver, and sprang for the one with the tomahawk, the chief's daughter suddenly appeared. Raising her hands, she exclaimed, 'Go back, Young Wild West. I will save her!'" (1908)

Visual arts

A number of visual artists focused their work on representations of the American Old West. American West-oriented art is sometimes referred to as "Western Art" by Americans. This relatively new category of art includes paintings, sculptures, and sometimes Native American crafts. Initially, subjects included exploration of the Western states and cowboy themes. Frederic Remington and Charles M. Russell are two artists who captured the "Wild West" in paintings and sculpture.[28] After the death of Remington Richard Lorenz became the preeminent artist painting in the western genre.[29]

Some art museums, such as the Buffalo Bill Center of the West in Wyoming and the Autry National Center in Los Angeles, feature American Western Art.[30]

Other media

The popularity of Westerns extends beyond films, literature, television, and visual art to include numerous other media.

Anime and manga

With anime and manga, the genre tends towards the science-fiction Western – e.g., Cowboy Bebop (1998 anime), Trigun (1995–2007 manga), and Outlaw Star (1996–1999 manga). Although contemporary Westerns also appear, such as Koya no Shonen Isamu, a 1971 shonen manga about a boy with a Japanese father and a Native American mother, or El Cazador de la Bruja, a 2007 anime television series set in modern-day Mexico. Part 7 of the manga series JoJo's Bizarre Adventure is based in the American Western setting. The story follows racers in a transcontinental horse race, the "Steel Ball Run". Golden Kamuy (2014–2022) shifts its setting to the fallout of the Russo-Japanese War, specifically focusing on Hokkaido and Sakhalin, and featuring the Ainu people and other local tribes instead of Native Americans, as well other recognizable western tropes.

Comics

Western comics have included serious entries, (such as the classic comics of the late 1940s and early 1950s (namely Kid Colt, Outlaw, Rawhide Kid, and Red Ryder) or more modern ones as Blueberry), cartoons, and parodies (such as Cocco Bill and Lucky Luke). In the 1990s and 2000s, Western comics leaned towards the fantasy, horror and science fiction genres, usually involving supernatural monsters, or Christian iconography as in Preacher. More traditional Western comics are found throughout this period, though (e.g., Jonah Hex and Loveless).

Games

Western arcade games, computer games, role-playing games, and video games are often either straightforward Westerns or Western-horror hybrids. Some Western-themed computer games include The Oregon Trail (1971), Mad Dog McCree (1990), Sunset Riders (1991), Outlaws (1997), Desperados series (2001–), Red Dead series (2004–), Gun (2005), and Call of Juarez series (2007–). Other video games adapt the "weird West" concept – e.g., Fallout (1997), Gunman Chronicles (2000), Darkwatch (2005), the Borderlands series (2009–), Fallout: New Vegas (2010), and Hard West (2015).

Radio dramas

Western radio dramas were very popular from the 1930s to the 1960s. Some popular shows include The Lone Ranger (first broadcast in 1933), The Cisco Kid (first broadcast in 1942), Dr. Sixgun (first broadcast in 1954), Have Gun–Will Travel (first broadcast in 1958), and Gunsmoke (first broadcast in 1952).[31]

Web series

Westerns have been showcased in short-episodic web series. Examples include League of STEAM, Red Bird, and Arkansas Traveler.

Subgenres

Within the larger scope of the Western genre, there are several recognized subgenres. Some subgenres, such as spaghetti Westerns, maintain standard Western settings and plots, while others take the Western theme and archetypes into different supergenres, such as Neo-Westerns or Space Westerns.

Influence on other genres

Being period drama pieces, both the Western and samurai genre influenced each other in style and themes throughout the years.[32] The Magnificent Seven was a remake of Akira Kurosawa's film Seven Samurai, and A Fistful of Dollars was a remake of Kurosawa's Yojimbo, which itself was inspired by Red Harvest, an American detective novel by Dashiell Hammett.[33] Kurosawa was influenced by American Westerns and was a fan of the genre, most especially John Ford.[34][35]

Despite the Cold War, the Western was a strong influence on Eastern Bloc cinema, which had its own take on the genre, the so-called "Red Western" or "Ostern". Generally these took two forms: either straight Westerns shot in the Eastern Bloc, or action films involving the Russian Revolution and civil war and the Basmachi rebellion.[citation needed]

Many elements of space-travel series and films borrow extensively from the conventions of the Western genre. This is particularly the case in the space Western subgenre of science fiction. Peter Hyams' Outland transferred the plot of High Noon to Io, moon of Jupiter. More recently, the space opera series Firefly used an explicitly Western theme for its portrayal of frontier worlds. Anime shows such as Cowboy Bebop, Trigun and Outlaw Star have been similar mixes of science-fiction and Western elements. The science fiction Western can be seen as a subgenre of either Westerns or science fiction. Elements of Western films can be found also in some films belonging essentially to other genres. For example, Kelly's Heroes is a war film, but its action and characters are Western-like.

 
John Wayne (1948)

The character played by Humphrey Bogart in noir films such as Casablanca and To Have and Have Not—an individual bound only by his own private code of honor—has a lot in common with the classic Western hero. In turn, the Western has also explored noir elements, as with the films Pursued and Sugar Creek.[citation needed]

In many of Robert A. Heinlein's books, the settlement of other planets is depicted in ways explicitly modeled on American settlement of the West. For example, in his Tunnel in the Sky, settlers set out to the planet "New Canaan", via an interstellar teleporter portal across the galaxy, in Conestoga wagons, their captain sporting mustaches and a little goatee and riding a Palomino horse—with Heinlein explaining that the colonists would need to survive on their own for some years, so horses are more practical than machines.[citation needed]

Stephen King's The Dark Tower is a series of seven books that meshes themes of Westerns, high fantasy, science fiction, and horror. The protagonist Roland Deschain is a gunslinger whose image and personality are largely inspired by the Man with No Name from Sergio Leone's films. In addition, the superhero fantasy genre has been described as having been derived from the cowboy hero, only powered up to omnipotence in a primarily urban setting. The Western genre has been parodied on a number of occasions, famous examples being Support Your Local Sheriff!, Cat Ballou, Mel Brooks's Blazing Saddles, and Rustler's Rhapsody.[citation needed]

George Lucas's Star Wars films use many elements of a Western, and Lucas has said he intended for Star Wars to revitalize cinematic mythology, a part the Western once held. The Jedi, who take their name from Jidaigeki, are modeled after samurai, showing the influence of Kurosawa. The character Han Solo dressed like an archetypal gunslinger, and the Mos Eisley cantina is much like an Old West saloon.[36]

Meanwhile, films such as The Big Lebowski, which plucked actor Sam Elliott out of the Old West and into a Los Angeles bowling alley, and Midnight Cowboy, about a Southern-boy-turned-gigolo in New York (who disappoints a client when he does not measure up to Gary Cooper), transplanted Western themes into modern settings for both purposes of parody and homage.[37]

 
Tom Mix in Mr. Logan, U.S.A., circa 1919

See also

References

  1. ^ "Sioux ghost dance". Library of Congress. 1894. Retrieved September 9, 2021.
  2. ^ "World's first Western movie 'filmed in Blackburn'". BBC News. October 31, 2019. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
  3. ^ "Kidnapping by Indians". BFI. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
  4. ^ Fenin, George N.; Everson, William K. (1962). The Western: From Silents to Cinerama. New York City: Bonanza Books. p. 47. ISBN 978-1-163-70021-1.
  5. ^ "Bronco Billy Anderson Is Dead at 88". The New York Times. January 21, 1971. Retrieved October 15, 2019.
  6. ^ Gittell, Noah (June 17, 2014). "Superheroes Replaced Cowboys at the Movies. But It's Time to Go Back to Cowboys". The Atlantic. Retrieved July 21, 2022.
  7. ^ a b Cowie, Peter (2004). John Ford and the American West. New York: Harry Abrams Inc. ISBN 978-0-8109-4976-8.
  8. ^ Agnew, Jeremy. December 2, 2014. The Creation of the Cowboy Hero: Fiction, Film and Fact, p. 88, McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-7839-2
  9. ^ Adams, Cecil (June 25, 2004). "Did Western gunfighters really face off one-on-one?". Straight Dope. Retrieved October 4, 2014. June 25, 2004
  10. ^ . History.com. July 21, 2014. Archived from the original on October 6, 2014. Retrieved October 4, 2014.
  11. ^ a b c Newman, Kim (1990). Wild West Movies. Bloomsbury.
  12. ^ Gruber, Frank The Pulp Jungle Sherbourne Press, 1967
  13. ^ "America's 10 Greatest Films in 10 Classic Genres". American Film Institute. Retrieved June 6, 2010.
  14. ^ McMahan, Alison; Alice Guy Blache: Lost Visionary of the Cinema; New York: Continuum, 2002; 133
  15. ^ Henry Nash Smith, Virgin Land: The American West as Symbol and Myth, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1950.
  16. ^ New York Times Magazine (November 10, 2007).
  17. ^ Indick, William. The Psychology of the Western. Pg. 2 McFarland, Aug 27, 2008.
  18. ^ Williams, Eric R. (2017). The screenwriters taxonomy : a roadmap to collaborative storytelling. New York, NY: Routledge Studies in Media Theory and Practice. ISBN 978-1-315-10864-3. OCLC 993983488. P. 21
  19. ^ "Paramount Ranch: Old Movie Town & Westworld Filming Location in Agoura Hills". California Through My Lens. March 10, 2014. Retrieved July 12, 2022.
  20. ^ Gary A. Yoggy, Riding the Video Range: The Rise and Fall of the Western on Television (McFarland & Company, 1995)
  21. ^ Burris, Joe (May 10, 2005). "The Eastern Earps". Baltimore Sun. Retrieved October 20, 2014.
  22. ^ Western at IMDb
  23. ^ Western at IMDb
  24. ^ [Guinn, Jeff. The Last Gunfight: The Real Story of the Shootout at the O.K. Corral and How it Changed the American West (first hardcover ed.). New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1-4391-5424-3]
  25. ^ Kisseloff, J. (editor) The Box: An Oral History of Television
  26. ^ . web.archive.org. April 3, 2013. Retrieved December 9, 2022.
  27. ^ McVeigh, Stephen (2007). The American Western. Edinburgh University Press.
  28. ^ Buscombe, Edward (1984). "Painting the Legend: Frederic Remington and the Western". Cinema Journal. pp. 12–27.
  29. ^ Wisconsin : a guide to the Badger State. New York: Duell, Sloan Pearce. 1941. p. 156. ISBN 978-1-60354-048-3. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
  30. ^ Goetzmann, William H. (1986). The West of the Imagination. New York: Norton.
  31. ^ . otrwesterns.com. Archived from the original on March 19, 2011.
  32. ^ . Digitalcommons.uri.edu. Archived from the original on September 29, 2015.
  33. ^ Kehr, Dave (January 23, 2007). "New DVDs: 'Films of Kenneth Anger' and 'Samurai Classics'". The New York Times.
  34. ^ Crogan, Patrick. . Senses of Cinema. Archived from the original on October 3, 2009.
  35. ^ Shaw, Justine. . Far Cry from the Original Site. Archived from the original on November 3, 2015. Retrieved December 20, 2015. December 14, 2015
  36. ^ Wickman, Forrest (December 13, 2015). "Star Wars Is a Postmodern Masterpiece". Slate. ISSN 1091-2339. Retrieved November 14, 2019.
  37. ^ Silva, Robert (2009). . Not From 'Round Here... Cowboys Who Pop Up Outside the Old West. Archived from the original on December 13, 2009.

Further reading

  • Buscombe, Edward, and Christopher Brookeman. The BFI Companion to the Western (A. Deutsch, 1988)
  • Everson, William K. A Pictorial History of the Western Film (New York: Citadel Press, 1969)
  • Kitses, Jim. Horizons West: The Western from John Ford to Clint Eastwood (British Film Institute, 2007).
  • Lenihan, John H. Showdown: Confronting Modern America in the Western Film (University of Illinois Press, 1980)
  • Nachbar, John G. Focus on the Western (Prentice Hall, 1974)
  • Simmon, Scott. The Invention of the Western Film: A Cultural History of the Genre's First Half Century (Cambridge University Press, 2003)

External links

Listen to this article (16 minutes)
 
This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 22 May 2006 (2006-05-22), and does not reflect subsequent edits.

western, genre, westerns, redirects, here, other, uses, western, disambiguation, western, movies, redirects, here, song, western, movies, been, suggested, that, this, article, merged, with, western, fiction, discuss, proposed, since, july, 2022, this, article,. Westerns redirects here For other uses see Western disambiguation Western movies redirects here For the song see Western Movies It has been suggested that this article be merged with Western fiction Discuss Proposed since July 2022 This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy December 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Western genre news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Western is a genre set in the American frontier and commonly associated with folk tales of the Western United States particularly the Southwestern United States as well as Northern Mexico and Western Canada It is commonly referred to as the Old West or the Wild West and depicted in Western media as a hostile sparsely populated frontier in a state of near total lawlessness patrolled by outlaws sheriffs and numerous other stock gunslinger characters Western narratives often concern the gradual attempts to tame the crime ridden American West using wider themes of justice freedom rugged individualism Manifest Destiny and the national history and identity of the United States Justus D Barnes in Western apparel as Bronco Billy Anderson from the silent film The Great Train Robbery 1903 the second Western film and the first one shot in the United States source source source source source source source source track PLAY The Great Train Robbery 1903 runtime 00 11 51 Contents 1 History 1 1 Golden Age 2 Stories and characters 3 Locations 4 Themes 4 1 Plots 5 Film 5 1 Characteristics 6 Television 7 Literature 8 Visual arts 9 Other media 9 1 Anime and manga 9 2 Comics 9 3 Games 9 4 Radio dramas 9 5 Web series 10 Subgenres 11 Influence on other genres 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksHistory Edit John Wayne in The Comancheros 1961 The first films that belong to the Western genre are a series of short single reel silents made in 1894 by Edison Studios at their Black Maria studio in West Orange New Jersey These featured veterans of Buffalo Bill s Wild West show exhibiting skills acquired by living in the Old West they included Annie Oakley shooting and members of the Sioux dancing 1 The earliest known Western narrative film is the British short Kidnapping by Indians made by Mitchell and Kenyon in Blackburn England in 1899 2 3 The Great Train Robbery 1903 based on the earlier British film A Daring Daylight Burglary Edwin S Porter s film starring Broncho Billy Anderson is often erroneously cited as the first Western though George N Fenin and William K Everson point out as mentioned above that the Edison company had played with Western material for several years prior to The Great Train Robbery Nonetheless they concur that Porter s film set the pattern of crime pursuit and retribution for the Western film as a genre 4 The film s popularity opened the door for Anderson to become the screen s first Western star he made several hundred Western film shorts So popular was the genre that he soon faced competition from Tom Mix and William S Hart 5 Golden Age Edit The period from the late 1940s to the 1950s has been called the Golden Age of the Western 6 It is epitomized by the work of several prominent directors including Robert Aldrich Apache 1954 Vera Cruz 1954 Budd Boetticher several films with Randolph Scott including The Tall T 1957 and Comanche Station 1960 Delmer Daves Broken Arrow 1950 The Last Wagon 1956 3 10 to Yuma 1957 Walt Disney Frontierland series Texas John Slaughter 1958 and Elfego Baca 1958 Allan Dwan Silver Lode 1954 Cattle Queen of Montana 1954 John Ford Stagecoach 1939 My Darling Clementine 1946 The Searchers 1956 The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance 1962 Samuel Fuller Run of the Arrow 1957 Forty Guns 1957 George Roy Hill Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid 1969 Howard Hawks Red River 1948 Rio Bravo 1959 El Dorado 1966 Henry King The Gunfighter 1950 The Bravados 1958 Sergio Leone For a Few Dollars More 1965 The Good the Bad and the Ugly 1966 Once Upon a Time in the West 1968 Anthony Mann Winchester 73 1950 The Man from Laramie 1955 The Tin Star 1957 Sam Peckinpah Ride the High Country 1962 The Wild Bunch 1969 Nicholas Ray Johnny Guitar 1954 George Stevens Annie Oakley 1935 Shane 1953 John Sturges Gunfight at the O K Corral 1957 The Magnificent Seven 1960 Jacques Tourneur Canyon Passage 1946 Wichita 1955 King Vidor Duel in the Sun 1946 Man Without a Star 1955 William A Wellman The Ox Bow Incident 1943 Yellow Sky 1948 Fred Zinnemann High Noon 1952 Stories and characters EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Stories commonly center on the life of a nomadic male white American drifter cowboy or gunfighter who rides a horse and is armed with a revolver and or a rifle The male characters typically wear broad brimmed and high crowned Stetson hats neckerchief bandannas vests and cowboy boots with spurs While many wear conventional shirts and trousers alternatives include buckskins and dusters Women are generally cast in secondary roles as romantic interest for the male lead or in supporting roles as saloon girls prostitutes or as the wives of pioneers and settlers the wife character often provides a measure of comic relief Other recurring characters include Native Americans of various tribes African Americans Mexicans lawmen bounty hunters outlaws bartenders traders gamblers soldiers especially mounted cavalry pioneers and settlers farmers ranchers and townsfolk The ambience is usually punctuated with a Western music score including American folk music and Spanish Mexican folk music such as country Native American music New Mexico music and rancheras Locations EditWesterns often stress the harshness of the wilderness and frequently set the action in an arid desolate landscape of deserts and mountains Often the vast landscape plays an important role presenting a mythic vision of the plains and deserts of the American West 7 Specific settings include ranches small frontier towns saloons railways wilderness and isolated military forts of the Wild West Many Westerns use a stock plot of depicting a crime then showing the pursuit of the wrongdoer ending in revenge and retribution which is often dispensed through a shootout or quick draw duel 8 9 10 Themes Edit The Lone Ranger a famous heroic lawman was with a cavalry of six Texas Rangers until they all except for him were killed He preferred to remain anonymous so he resigned and built a sixth grave that supposedly held his body He fights on as a lawman wearing a mask for Outlaws live in a world of fear Fear of the mysterious The Western genre sometimes portrays the conquest of the wilderness and the subordination of nature in the name of civilization or the confiscation of the territorial rights of the original Native American inhabitants of the frontier 11 The Western depicts a society organized around codes of honor and personal direct or private justice frontier justice dispensed by gunfights These honor codes are often played out through depictions of feuds or individuals seeking personal revenge or retribution against someone who has wronged them e g True Grit has revenge and retribution as its main themes This Western depiction of personal justice contrasts sharply with justice systems organized around rationalistic abstract law that exist in cities in which social order is maintained predominantly through relatively impersonal institutions such as courtrooms The popular perception of the Western is a story that centers on the life of a seminomadic wanderer usually a cowboy or a gunfighter 11 A showdown or duel at high noon featuring two or more gunfighters is a stereotypical scene in the popular conception of Westerns In some ways such protagonists may be considered the literary descendants of the knights errant who stood at the center of earlier extensive genres such as the Arthurian romances 11 Like the cowboy or gunfighter of the Western the knight errant of the earlier European tales and poetry was wandering from place to place on his horse fighting villains of various kinds and bound to no fixed social structures but only to his own innate code of honor Like knights errant the heroes of Westerns frequently rescue damsels in distress Similarly the wandering protagonists of Westerns share many characteristics with the ronin in modern Japanese culture The Western typically takes these elements and uses them to tell simple morality tales although some notable examples e g the later Westerns of John Ford or Clint Eastwood s Unforgiven about an old hired killer are more morally ambiguous Westerns often stress the harshness and isolation of the wilderness and frequently set the action in an arid desolate landscape Western films generally have specific settings such as isolated ranches Native American villages or small frontier towns with a saloon Oftentimes these settings appear deserted and without much structure Apart from the wilderness the saloon usually emphasizes that this is the Wild West it is the place to go for music raucous piano playing women often prostitutes gambling draw poker or five card stud drinking beer whiskey or tequila if set in Mexico brawling and shooting In some Westerns where civilization has arrived the town has a church a general store a bank and a school in others where frontier rules still hold sway it is as Sergio Leone said where life has no value Plots Edit Author and screenwriter Frank Gruber identified seven basic plots for Westerns 12 Union Pacific story The plot concerns construction of a railroad a telegraph line or some other type of modern technology on the wild frontier Wagon train stories fall into this category Ranch story Ranchers protecting their family ranch from rustlers or large landowners attempting to force out the proper owners Empire story The plot involves building a ranch empire or an oil empire from scratch a classic rags to riches plot often involving conflict over resources such as water or minerals Revenge story The plot often involves an elaborate chase and pursuit by a wronged individual but it may also include elements of the classic mystery story Cavalry and Indian story The plot revolves around taming the wilderness for White settlers and or fighting Native Americans Outlaw story The outlaw gangs dominate the action Marshal story The lawman and his challenges drive the plotGruber said that good writers used dialogue and plot development to develop these basic plots into believable stories Film EditCharacteristics Edit Gary Cooper in Vera Cruz The American Film Institute defines Western films as those set in the American West that embody the spirit the struggle and the demise of the new frontier 13 The term Western used to describe a narrative film genre appears to have originated with a July 1912 article in Motion Picture World magazine 14 Most of the characteristics of Western films were part of 19th century popular Western fiction and were firmly in place before film became a popular art form 15 Western films commonly feature protagonists such as cowboys gunslingers and bounty hunters who are often depicted as seminomadic wanderers who wear Stetson hats bandannas spurs and buckskins use revolvers or rifles as everyday tools of survival and as a means to settle disputes using frontier justice Protagonists ride between dusty towns and cattle ranches on their trusty steeds citation needed Western films were enormously popular in the silent film era 1894 1927 With the advent of sound in 1927 28 the major Hollywood studios rapidly abandoned Westerns 16 leaving the genre to smaller studios and producers These smaller organizations churned out countless low budget features and serials in the 1930s By the late 1930s the Western film was widely regarded as a pulp genre in Hollywood but its popularity was dramatically revived in 1939 by major studio productions such as Dodge City starring Errol Flynn Jesse James with Tyrone Power Union Pacific with Joel McCrea Destry Rides Again featuring James Stewart and Marlene Dietrich and especially John Ford s landmark Western adventure Stagecoach starring John Wayne which became one of the biggest hits of the year Released through United Artists Stagecoach made John Wayne a mainstream screen star in the wake of a decade of headlining B Westerns Wayne had been introduced to the screen 10 years earlier as the leading man in director Raoul Walsh s spectacular widescreen The Big Trail which failed at the box office in spite of being shot on location across the American West including the Grand Canyon Yosemite and the giant redwoods due in part to exhibitors inability to switch over to widescreen during the Great Depression After the Westerns renewed commercial successes in the late 1930s their popularity continued to rise until its peak in the 1950s when the number of Western films produced outnumbered all other genres combined 17 Screenwriter and scholar Eric R Williams identifies western films as one of eleven super genres in his screenwriters taxonomy claiming that all feature length narrative films can be classified by these super genres The other ten super genres are action crime fantasy horror romance science fiction slice of life sports thriller and war 18 Western films often depict conflicts with Native Americans While early Eurocentric Westerns frequently portray the Injuns as dishonorable villains the later and more culturally neutral Westerns gave Native Americans a more sympathetic treatment Other recurring themes of Westerns include treks e g The Big Trail or perilous journeys e g Stagecoach or groups of bandits terrorizing small towns such as in The Magnificent Seven Early Westerns were mostly filmed in the studio as in other early Hollywood films but when location shooting became more common from the 1930s producers of Westerns used desolate corners of Arizona California Colorado Kansas Montana Nevada New Mexico Oklahoma Texas Utah or Wyoming These settings gave filmmakers the ability to depict vast plains looming mountains and epic canyons Productions were also filmed on location at movie ranches 19 Often the vast landscape becomes more than a vivid backdrop it becomes a character in the film After the early 1950s various widescreen formats such as Cinemascope 1953 and VistaVision used the expanded width of the screen to display spectacular western landscapes John Ford s use of Monument Valley as an expressive landscape in his films from Stagecoach to Cheyenne Autumn 1965 present us with a mythic vision of the plains and deserts of the American West embodied most memorably in Monument Valley with its buttes and mesas that tower above the men on horseback whether they be settlers soldiers or Native Americans 7 Television EditMain article Westerns on television James Garner and Jack Kelly in Maverick 1957 When television became popular in the late 1940s and 1950s Television Westerns quickly became an audience favorite 20 Beginning with rebroadcasts of existing films a number of movie cowboys had their own TV shows As demand for the Western increased new stories and stars were introduced A number of long running TV Westerns became classics in their own right such as The Lone Ranger 1949 1957 Death Valley Days 1952 1970 The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp 1955 1961 Cheyenne 1955 1962 Gunsmoke 1955 1975 Maverick 1957 1962 Have Gun Will Travel 1957 1963 Wagon Train 1957 1965 The Rifleman 1958 1963 Rawhide 1959 1966 Bonanza 1959 1973 The Virginian 1962 1971 and The Big Valley 1965 1969 The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp was the first Western television series written for adults 21 premiering four days before Gunsmoke on September 6 1955 22 23 The peak year for television Westerns was 1959 with 26 such shows airing during primetime At least six of them were connected in some extent to Wyatt Earp The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp Bat Masterson Tombstone Territory Broken Arrow Johnny Ringo and Gunsmoke 24 Increasing costs of American television production weeded out most action half hour series in the early 1960s and their replacement by hour long television shows increasingly in color 25 Traditional Westerns died out in the late 1960s as a result of network changes in demographic targeting along with pressure from parental television groups Future entries in the genre would incorporate elements from other genera such as crime drama and mystery whodunit elements Western shows from the 1970s included Hec Ramsey Kung Fu Little House on the Prairie McCloud The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams and the short lived but highly acclaimed How the West Was Won that originated from a miniseries with the same name In the 1990s and 2000s hour long Westerns and slickly packaged made for TV movie Westerns were introduced such as Lonesome Dove 1989 and Dr Quinn Medicine Woman Also new elements were once again added to the Western formula such as science fiction Western Firefly created by Joss Whedon in 2002 Deadwood was a critically acclaimed Western series that aired on HBO from 2004 through 2006 Hell on Wheels a fictionalized story of the construction of the first transcontinental railroad aired on AMC for five seasons between 2011 and 2016 Longmire is a Western series that centered on Walt Longmire a sheriff in fictional Absaroka County Wyoming Originally aired on the A amp E network from 2012 to 2014 it was picked up by Netflix in 2015 until the show s conclusion in 2017 AMC and Vince Gilligan s critically acclaimed Breaking Bad is a much more modern take on the western genre Set in New Mexico from 2008 through 2013 it follows Walter White Bryan Cranston a chemistry teacher diagnosed with Stage III Lung Cancer who cooks and sells crystal meth to provide money for his family after he dies while slowly growing further and further into the illicit drug market eventually turning into a ruthless drug dealer and killer While the show has scenes in a populated suburban neighborhood and nearby Albuquerque much of the show takes place in the desert where Walter often takes his RV car out into the open desert to cook his meth and most action sequences occur in the desert similar to old fashioned western movies The clash between the Wild West and modern technology like cars and cellphones while also focusing primarily on being a Crime drama makes the show a unique spin on both genres Walter s reliance on the desert environment makes the western feel a pivotal role in the show and would continue to be used in the spinoff series Better Call Saul 26 Literature EditMain article Western fiction Western fiction is a genre of literature set in the American Old West most commonly between 1860 and 1900 The first critically recognized Western was The Virginian 1902 by Owen Wister Classic Wild West Literature Other well known writers of Western fiction include Zane Grey from the early 1900s Ernest Haycox Luke Short and Louis L Amour from the mid 20th century Many writers better known in other genres such as Leigh Brackett Elmore Leonard and Larry McMurtry have also written Western novels The genre s popularity peaked in the 1960s due in part to the shuttering of many pulp magazines the popularity of televised Westerns and the rise of the spy novel Readership began to drop off in the mid to late 1970s and reached a new low in the 2000s Most bookstores outside of a few Western states now only carry a small number of Western novels and short story collections 27 Literary forms that share similar themes include stories of the American frontier the gaucho literature of Argentina and tales of the settlement of the Australian Outback As Wild felled one of the redskins by a blow from the butt of his revolver and sprang for the one with the tomahawk the chief s daughter suddenly appeared Raising her hands she exclaimed Go back Young Wild West I will save her 1908 Visual arts EditMain article Artists of the American West A number of visual artists focused their work on representations of the American Old West American West oriented art is sometimes referred to as Western Art by Americans This relatively new category of art includes paintings sculptures and sometimes Native American crafts Initially subjects included exploration of the Western states and cowboy themes Frederic Remington and Charles M Russell are two artists who captured the Wild West in paintings and sculpture 28 After the death of Remington Richard Lorenz became the preeminent artist painting in the western genre 29 Some art museums such as the Buffalo Bill Center of the West in Wyoming and the Autry National Center in Los Angeles feature American Western Art 30 Other media EditThe popularity of Westerns extends beyond films literature television and visual art to include numerous other media Anime and manga Edit With anime and manga the genre tends towards the science fiction Western e g Cowboy Bebop 1998 anime Trigun 1995 2007 manga and Outlaw Star 1996 1999 manga Although contemporary Westerns also appear such as Koya no Shonen Isamu a 1971 shonenmanga about a boy with a Japanese father and a Native American mother or El Cazador de la Bruja a 2007 anime television series set in modern day Mexico Part 7 of the manga series JoJo s Bizarre Adventure is based in the American Western setting The story follows racers in a transcontinental horse race the Steel Ball Run Golden Kamuy 2014 2022 shifts its setting to the fallout of the Russo Japanese War specifically focusing on Hokkaido and Sakhalin and featuring the Ainu people and other local tribes instead of Native Americans as well other recognizable western tropes Comics Edit Western comics have included serious entries such as the classic comics of the late 1940s and early 1950s namely Kid Colt Outlaw Rawhide Kid and Red Ryder or more modern ones as Blueberry cartoons and parodies such as Cocco Bill and Lucky Luke In the 1990s and 2000s Western comics leaned towards the fantasy horror and science fiction genres usually involving supernatural monsters or Christian iconography as in Preacher More traditional Western comics are found throughout this period though e g Jonah Hex and Loveless Games Edit Western arcade games computer games role playing games and video games are often either straightforward Westerns or Western horror hybrids Some Western themed computer games include The Oregon Trail 1971 Mad Dog McCree 1990 Sunset Riders 1991 Outlaws 1997 Desperados series 2001 Red Dead series 2004 Gun 2005 and Call of Juarez series 2007 Other video games adapt the weird West concept e g Fallout 1997 Gunman Chronicles 2000 Darkwatch 2005 the Borderlands series 2009 Fallout New Vegas 2010 and Hard West 2015 Radio dramas Edit Western radio dramas were very popular from the 1930s to the 1960s Some popular shows include The Lone Ranger first broadcast in 1933 The Cisco Kid first broadcast in 1942 Dr Sixgun first broadcast in 1954 Have Gun Will Travel first broadcast in 1958 and Gunsmoke first broadcast in 1952 31 Web series Edit Westerns have been showcased in short episodic web series Examples include League of STEAM Red Bird and Arkansas Traveler Subgenres EditMain article List of Western subgenres Within the larger scope of the Western genre there are several recognized subgenres Some subgenres such as spaghetti Westerns maintain standard Western settings and plots while others take the Western theme and archetypes into different supergenres such as Neo Westerns or Space Westerns Influence on other genres EditBeing period drama pieces both the Western and samurai genre influenced each other in style and themes throughout the years 32 The Magnificent Seven was a remake of Akira Kurosawa s film Seven Samurai and A Fistful of Dollars was a remake of Kurosawa s Yojimbo which itself was inspired by Red Harvest an American detective novel by Dashiell Hammett 33 Kurosawa was influenced by American Westerns and was a fan of the genre most especially John Ford 34 35 Despite the Cold War the Western was a strong influence on Eastern Bloc cinema which had its own take on the genre the so called Red Western or Ostern Generally these took two forms either straight Westerns shot in the Eastern Bloc or action films involving the Russian Revolution and civil war and the Basmachi rebellion citation needed Many elements of space travel series and films borrow extensively from the conventions of the Western genre This is particularly the case in the space Western subgenre of science fiction Peter Hyams Outland transferred the plot of High Noon to Io moon of Jupiter More recently the space opera series Firefly used an explicitly Western theme for its portrayal of frontier worlds Anime shows such as Cowboy Bebop Trigun and Outlaw Star have been similar mixes of science fiction and Western elements The science fiction Western can be seen as a subgenre of either Westerns or science fiction Elements of Western films can be found also in some films belonging essentially to other genres For example Kelly s Heroes is a war film but its action and characters are Western like John Wayne 1948 The character played by Humphrey Bogart in noir films such as Casablanca and To Have and Have Not an individual bound only by his own private code of honor has a lot in common with the classic Western hero In turn the Western has also explored noir elements as with the films Pursued and Sugar Creek citation needed In many of Robert A Heinlein s books the settlement of other planets is depicted in ways explicitly modeled on American settlement of the West For example in his Tunnel in the Sky settlers set out to the planet New Canaan via an interstellar teleporter portal across the galaxy in Conestoga wagons their captain sporting mustaches and a little goatee and riding a Palomino horse with Heinlein explaining that the colonists would need to survive on their own for some years so horses are more practical than machines citation needed Stephen King s The Dark Tower is a series of seven books that meshes themes of Westerns high fantasy science fiction and horror The protagonist Roland Deschain is a gunslinger whose image and personality are largely inspired by the Man with No Name from Sergio Leone s films In addition the superhero fantasy genre has been described as having been derived from the cowboy hero only powered up to omnipotence in a primarily urban setting The Western genre has been parodied on a number of occasions famous examples being Support Your Local Sheriff Cat Ballou Mel Brooks s Blazing Saddles and Rustler s Rhapsody citation needed George Lucas s Star Wars films use many elements of a Western and Lucas has said he intended for Star Wars to revitalize cinematic mythology a part the Western once held The Jedi who take their name from Jidaigeki are modeled after samurai showing the influence of Kurosawa The character Han Solo dressed like an archetypal gunslinger and the Mos Eisley cantina is much like an Old West saloon 36 Meanwhile films such as The Big Lebowski which plucked actor Sam Elliott out of the Old West and into a Los Angeles bowling alley and Midnight Cowboy about a Southern boy turned gigolo in New York who disappoints a client when he does not measure up to Gary Cooper transplanted Western themes into modern settings for both purposes of parody and homage 37 Tom Mix in Mr Logan U S A circa 1919See also EditDime Western Wild West shows List of Western computer and video games List of Western fiction authors Lists of Western films Western lifestyleReferences Edit Sioux ghost dance Library of Congress 1894 Retrieved September 9 2021 World s first Western movie filmed in Blackburn BBC News October 31 2019 Retrieved November 1 2019 Kidnapping by Indians BFI Retrieved November 1 2019 Fenin George N Everson William K 1962 The Western From Silents to Cinerama New York City Bonanza Books p 47 ISBN 978 1 163 70021 1 Bronco Billy Anderson Is Dead at 88 The New York Times January 21 1971 Retrieved October 15 2019 Gittell Noah June 17 2014 Superheroes Replaced Cowboys at the Movies But It s Time to Go Back to Cowboys The Atlantic Retrieved July 21 2022 a b Cowie Peter 2004 John Ford and the American West New York Harry Abrams Inc ISBN 978 0 8109 4976 8 Agnew Jeremy December 2 2014 The Creation of the Cowboy Hero Fiction Film and Fact p 88 McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 7839 2 Adams Cecil June 25 2004 Did Western gunfighters really face off one on one Straight Dope Retrieved October 4 2014 June 25 2004 Wild Bill Hickok fights first western showdown History com July 21 2014 Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved October 4 2014 a b c Newman Kim 1990 Wild West Movies Bloomsbury Gruber Frank The Pulp Jungle Sherbourne Press 1967 America s 10 Greatest Films in 10 Classic Genres American Film Institute Retrieved June 6 2010 McMahan Alison Alice Guy Blache Lost Visionary of the Cinema New York Continuum 2002 133 Henry Nash Smith Virgin Land The American West as Symbol and Myth Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press 1950 New York Times Magazine November 10 2007 Indick William The Psychology of the Western Pg 2 McFarland Aug 27 2008 Williams Eric R 2017 The screenwriters taxonomy a roadmap to collaborative storytelling New York NY Routledge Studies in Media Theory and Practice ISBN 978 1 315 10864 3 OCLC 993983488 P 21 Paramount Ranch Old Movie Town amp Westworld Filming Location in Agoura Hills California Through My Lens March 10 2014 Retrieved July 12 2022 Gary A Yoggy Riding the Video Range The Rise and Fall of the Western on Television McFarland amp Company 1995 Burris Joe May 10 2005 The Eastern Earps Baltimore Sun Retrieved October 20 2014 Western at IMDb Western at IMDb Guinn Jeff The Last Gunfight The Real Story of the Shootout at the O K Corral and How it Changed the American West first hardcover ed New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 4391 5424 3 Kisseloff J editor The Box An Oral History of Television Local IQ Contemporary Western An interview with Vince Gilligan web archive org April 3 2013 Retrieved December 9 2022 McVeigh Stephen 2007 The American Western Edinburgh University Press Buscombe Edward 1984 Painting the Legend Frederic Remington and the Western Cinema Journal pp 12 27 Wisconsin a guide to the Badger State New York Duell Sloan Pearce 1941 p 156 ISBN 978 1 60354 048 3 Retrieved June 13 2022 Goetzmann William H 1986 The West of the Imagination New York Norton Old Time Radio Westerns otrwesterns com Archived from the original on March 19 2011 Cowboys and Shoguns The American Western Japanese Jidaigeki and Cross Cultural Exchange Digitalcommons uri edu Archived from the original on September 29 2015 Kehr Dave January 23 2007 New DVDs Films of Kenneth Anger and Samurai Classics The New York Times Crogan Patrick Translating Kurosawa Senses of Cinema Archived from the original on October 3 2009 Shaw Justine Star Wars Origins Far Cry from the Original Site Archived from the original on November 3 2015 Retrieved December 20 2015 December 14 2015 Wickman Forrest December 13 2015 Star Wars Is a Postmodern Masterpiece Slate ISSN 1091 2339 Retrieved November 14 2019 Silva Robert 2009 Future of the Classic Not From Round Here Cowboys Who Pop Up Outside the Old West Archived from the original on December 13 2009 Further reading EditBuscombe Edward and Christopher Brookeman The BFI Companion to the Western A Deutsch 1988 Everson William K A Pictorial History of the Western Film New York Citadel Press 1969 Kitses Jim Horizons West The Western from John Ford to Clint Eastwood British Film Institute 2007 Lenihan John H Showdown Confronting Modern America in the Western Film University of Illinois Press 1980 Nachbar John G Focus on the Western Prentice Hall 1974 Simmon Scott The Invention of the Western Film A Cultural History of the Genre s First Half Century Cambridge University Press 2003 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to wbr Westerns wbr Wild West in art and wbr Native Americans in art Listen to this article 16 minutes source source This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 22 May 2006 2006 05 22 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles Articles on Western film and TV in Western American Literature Special issue of Western American Literature on Global Westerns Most Popular Westerns at the Internet Movie Database Western Writers of America website The Western St James Encyclopedia of Pop Culture 2002 I Watch Westerns Ludwig von Mises Institute Film Festival for the Western Genre website Western Filmscript Collection Yale Collection of Western Americana Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Western genre amp oldid 1129315534, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.